Laguna Salada Fault
The Laguna Salada Fault is a geological fault between the United States and Mexico. About 64–80 kilometers (40–50 mi) long, it straddles the Imperial County-California–Baja California border.[1]
Earthquakes
1892
According to some seismologists the 1892 Laguna Salada earthquake ranks among the largest earthquakes in California and Baja California in historic times. It occurred on 23 February 1892, and was centered near Laguna Salada in Baja California. [2]
Faults
The Laguna Salada Fault is a probable southern continuation of the Elsinore Fault Zone in Southern California.[4] These faults are considered to be secondary cohorts of the San Andreas Fault, and as such share some of the strike-slip motion between the North American Plate and the Pacific Plate.[5]
gollark: Repairing gives 1XP per cannon repaired, *but* costs 1 more snow.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Also a bit ridiculous that they had to do that instead of just *having TJ09 fix the stupid things*.
gollark: "Fixed a bug where damaged weapons could still attack"? I seemed to be able to attack with damaged weapons earlier.
gollark: ... why does a SHORT ice wall cost MORE ice than a big one?
References
- "One death reported in Baja quake". Los Angeles Times. 2010-04-04. Retrieved 2010-04-04.
- Hough, Susan (August 2004). "Revisiting the 23 February 1892 Laguna Salada Earthquake". Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 94 (4): 1571–1578. Bibcode:2004BuSSA..94.1571H. doi:10.1785/012003244.
- Chang, Alicia (2010-04-04). "Big Baja quake came from 'chaotic' fault system". San Jose Mercury News. Retrieved 2010-04-04.
- Dorsey, Becky. "Previous Work in Laguna Salada". University of Oregon. Archived from the original on 2008-05-13. Retrieved 2010-04-04.
- Caltech
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